
A BMA survey on Media Production Infrastructure in Africa has revealed significant barriers hindering cross-border collaboration and growth across the continent’s media production sector. The findings underscore an urgent need for targeted intervention to unlock the full potential of pan-African storytelling and content distribution.
The survey, which polled media professionals across Africa, highlights that a majority of respondents face critical obstacles when attempting to collaborate internationally, suggesting structural and financial impediments are slowing the development of a unified African media market.
When asked about the main challenges in collaborating across African borders, respondents consistently pointed to financial constraints and a lack of established connectivity.
The three most cited challenges were:
- Funding Limitations: A large number of survey respondents identified funding limitations as the single biggest obstacle to working with partners in other African countries. This indicates that while the creative appetite for collaborative projects exists, the necessary capital is scarce.
- Limited Networks or Partnerships: This points to a fragmented ecosystem in which potential collaborators struggle to find and connect with the right contacts across national borders.
- Weak and differing Regulations and Policies: Complicating matters further, respondents cited the challenge of navigating varying national regulations and policies, underscoring that non-tariff barriers and inconsistent legal frameworks pose a significant burden on cross-border operations.
“Accordingly, Benjamin Pius, CEO of Broadcast Media Africa, said: This survey is a clear signal to governments, regulatory bodies, and investors across Africa that although the Continent’s media and the content it generates have the potential for massive global appeal, financial gaps and regulatory complexity are holding back our players.
“Addressing the top challenges—funding access, network building, and regulatory harmonisation—is non-negotiable if we are serious about creating a robust, unified, and competitive media market,” Mr Pius summed.
A copy of the briefing report on Media Production Infrastructure In Africa – Status Survey can be accessed here.












